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North and Northwest Culture Areas Arctic Long, cold winters and short summers Inuit peoples in present-day Alaska and Canada Aleut peoples in Alaska Fished.

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Presentation on theme: "North and Northwest Culture Areas Arctic Long, cold winters and short summers Inuit peoples in present-day Alaska and Canada Aleut peoples in Alaska Fished."— Presentation transcript:

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2 North and Northwest Culture Areas Arctic Long, cold winters and short summers Inuit peoples in present-day Alaska and Canada Aleut peoples in Alaska Fished and hunted large mammals Subarctic Long, cold winters and short summers Dorgrib and Montagnais peoples Hunters followed migrating deer People lived in temporary shelters made of animal skins

3 West and Southwest Culture Areas California Many food sources, such as acorns, fish, and deer People lived in isolated family groups of 50 to 300. More than 100 different languages were spoken. Groups included the Hupa, Miwok, and Yukots. Southwest Dry climate Groups included the Apache, Navajo, and Pueblo. The Pueblo irrigated land to grow crops. The Apache and Navajo hunted game and raided the villages of other groups.

4 Pacific Northwest Carved images of totems, ancestor or animal spirits, on tall, wooden poles Held feasts called potlatches Thrived on abundant game animals, fish, and wild plants

5 Great Plains Stretched from Canada to Texas and from the Mississippi Valley to the Rocky Mountains Mainly grasslands, with game such as buffalo Used buffalo skins for shields, clothing and coverings for teepees, cone-shaped shelters Matrilineal societies that traced ancestry through their mothers, not their fathers Groups included the Mandan, Pawnee, Arapaho, Blackfoot, and Comanche.

6 Northeast and Southeast Region rich in sources of food and shelter Southeastern groups, such as the Cherokee and Creek, lived in farming villages. The Algonquian and Iroquois were the main groups in the Northeast. The Iroquois formed the Iroquois League, a confederation that waged war against non- Iroquois peoples.

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21 – Buffalo Destroyed by tourists and fur traders In just less than 100 years the number of buffalo in the U.S. went from approximately 15 million in 1800 to fewer than 600 in 1886. Indians used buffalo for food, clothing, shelter and fuel

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